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  2. Async/await - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Async/await

    The return type, Task<T>, is C#'s analogue to the concept of a promise, and here is indicated to have a result value of type int. The first expression to execute when this method is called will be new HttpClient().GetByteArrayAsync(uri), [13]: 189–190, 344 [1]: 882 which is another asynchronous method returning a Task<byte[]>. Because this ...

  3. Memoization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memoization

    In programming languages where functions are first-class objects (such as Lua, Python, or Perl [6]), automatic memoization can be implemented by replacing (at run-time) a function with its calculated value once a value has been calculated for a given set of parameters. The function that does this value-for-function-object replacement can ...

  4. Syntactic sugar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syntactic_sugar

    Similarly an array element update is a procedure consisting of three arguments, for example set_array(Array, vector(i,j), value), but many languages also provide syntax such as Array[i,j] = value. A construct in a language is syntactic sugar if it can be removed from the language without any effect on what the language can do: functionality and ...

  5. JavaScript syntax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JavaScript_syntax

    Rest parameters are similar to Javascript's arguments object, which is an array-like object that contains all of the parameters (named and unnamed) in the current function call. Unlike arguments, however, rest parameters are true Array objects, so methods such as .slice() and .sort() can be used on them directly.

  6. Memento pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memento_pattern

    One example of how this can be used is to restore an object to its previous state (undo via rollback), another is versioning, another is custom serialization. The memento pattern is implemented with three objects: the originator, a caretaker and a memento. The originator is some object that has an internal state.

  7. Immutable object - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immutable_object

    If all fields are immutable, then the object is immutable. If the whole object cannot be extended by another class, the object is called strongly immutable. [4] This might, for example, help to explicitly enforce certain invariants about certain data in the object staying the same through the lifetime of the object.

  8. Mutator method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutator_method

    PHP defines the "magic methods" __getand__set for properties of objects. [ 9 ] In this example of a simple class representing a student with only the name stored, one can see the variable name is private, i.e. only visible from the Student class, and the "setter" and "getter" is public, namely the getName() and setName('name') methods.

  9. PHP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PHP

    In previous versions of PHP, objects were handled like value types. [230] The drawback of this method was that code had to make heavy use of PHP's "reference" variables if it wanted to modify an object it was passed rather than creating a copy of it. In the new approach, objects are referenced by handle, and not by value. [citation needed]